Micron/Crucial briefed us on their new M500 line of SSDs, which upgrades the controller to the Marvell 88SS9187-BLD2 along with moving to 20nm Micron MLC NAND. Along with the NAND process shrink comes higher NAND die capacity: 128Gb per die to be specific. This in turn allows Micron to bring higher capacity SSDs down to previously unheard of prices—particularly for what should be high performance, high quality SSDs. The M500 line will launch with 120/240/480/960GB models, in 2.5”, mSATA, and M.2 (formerly NGFF) form factors. Full pricing information isn’t available yet, but Micron is promising the 960GB drives will cost under $600. We’ve basically seen the same sort of drive upgrade from Plextor already with the M5 Pro, though both Plextor and Micron of course provide their own customized firmware. Note also that both the Micron and Crucial versions will use the same M500 branding, which will hopefully alleviate any confusion this time around. Here are the core specs for the four capacities.

Micron / Crucial M500 Specifications
Controller Marvell 88SS9187
NAND Micron 20nm MLC NAND
Form Factor 2.5", mSATA, M.2 2.5", mSATA, M.2 2.5", mSATA, M.2 2.5"
Raw NAND Capacity 128GiB 256GiB 512GiB 1024GiB
User Capacity 120GB 240GB 480GB 960GB
Sequential Read 500MB/s 500MB/s 500MB/s 500MB/s
Sequential Write 130MB/s 250MB/s 400MB/s 400MB/s
4K Random Read 62K IOPS 72K IOPS 80K IOPS 80K IOPS
4K Random Write 35K IOPS 60K IOPS 80K IOPS 80K IOPS
Warranty 3 years

There are a few key points worthy of note. One is that the M500 posts lower transfer rates and IOPS than the M5 Pro, though of course these are all paper specs so take them with a grain of salt. The other interesting item is that Micron is now going with more overprovisioning than on their previous model SSDs. We’ve seen the effect of spare area in our recent testing, so the move from 7% spare area (the difference between GiB and GB) to 14.5% spare area will improve the worst-case performance. Another item to note is that the 2.5” enclosures are now all 7mm thick, and they ship with a free 9.5mm adapter. All of the M500 line includes hardware AES 256-bit encryption, and Micron showed us an array of small capacitors on one of the M.2 form factor drives that supported flushing of all data to the NAND in the event of a power loss--not a super capacitor as seen in enterprise class SSDs, but there's no RAM cache to flush so it's just an extra precaution to ensure all of the data writes complete.

At this point, we’re now getting very close to the limits of the SATA 6Gbps interface, so some performance improvements over the previous generation M4 aren’t all that huge. Read speeds have improved from 415MB/s on the M4 series and write speeds are up from 260MB/s on the larger models; on the other hand, 4K IOPS almost double from 40K/50K read/write (again on the larger models), so random performance should be substantially better. Reliability has been quite good with Micron/Crucial drives over the past couple years, and the new drives will hopefully continue that legacy. Availability I believe should be Q2 2013 (Micron wasn't specific on this),  and we’ll have full performance reviews when we get samples.

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  • mevans336 - Thursday, January 10, 2013 - link

    I'd plunk down $600 for a 1TB SSD. I split my work across 2 Samsung SSD drives and a 2TB mechanical drive (for bulk storage) now and it's rather cumbersome. I'd love to consolidate everything onto a single SSD. Looking forward to a review and in-depth opinion on reliability from you guys.
  • nathanddrews - Thursday, January 10, 2013 - link

    Ditto.

    I already commented on the Mushkin drive before reading this article. Under $600! Sweet! I've been promising myself that $500 would be my cutoff, but this is just too tempting...

    Is it like the Mushkin RAID-0 512 solution, or is this the real deal 128Gb NAND? I don't really care either way if I can get a 1TB SSD for under $600...
  • Kristian Vättö - Thursday, January 10, 2013 - link

    I'm 99% sure that it's the real deal. Micron makes its own NAND (IMFT) so they are the first one to get access to new products such as 128Gb/die NAND.
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, January 10, 2013 - link

    Correct: single controller 960GB. They're doing 128Gb die with 8 per package and 8 packages on the SSD.
  • nathanddrews - Thursday, January 10, 2013 - link

    Bad. Ass. Thanks, guys. Keep up the great work!
  • jwcalla - Thursday, January 10, 2013 - link

    I just realized something... gigabit vs gibibit.
  • Soulkeeper - Thursday, January 10, 2013 - link

    Marvell controller using provisioning ?
    isn't this a first ?
  • josephjpeters - Thursday, January 10, 2013 - link

    Probably has something to do with using 20nm MLC and lower P/E cycles. Even with OP you're still only get a 3 year warranty.
  • Kristian Vättö - Thursday, January 10, 2013 - link

    Unless Micron's validation is significantly different from Intel's, their 20nm MLC should still be 3,000 P/E cycles (like Intel's).

    More OP is helpful in general as it helps with performance consistency as we have shown before.
  • Wolfpup - Thursday, January 10, 2013 - link

    I like the M4, except that it lacks hardware encryption (while Intel's 320, 520, and I assume 330/335 have hardware encryption).

    Does the M500 add hardware encryption? (I assume adding a drive password is what locks an encrypted drive...like your password decrypts the drive's key which decrypts the drive, all running on the drive itself unbenounced to the PC it's in).

    Other than that, if these work, they look awesome. I love that they've left more spare area, and 960GB in a high quality SSD for <$600?!? That's almost mind boggling!

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